Emotional Sobriety: The Next Frontier

In 1958, Bill Wilson wrote, “I think that many oldsters who have put our AA “booze cure” to severe but successful tests will find that they lack emotional sobriety. Perhaps they will be the spearhead for the next major development in AA – the development of much more real maturity and balance (which is to say, humility) in our relations with ourselves, with our fellows, and with God.” He basically said they had emphasized not drinking more than having emotional stability, and he felt that they put the cart before the horse. He saw this as the next level of maturity in the AA program itself.

In effect, all twelve-step programs are about developing emotional sobriety. Many individuals who consider themselves to have a co-occurring mood disorder may find that through the twelve-step program, not only can they maintain sobriety, but their mood disorder improves. Others will need medication while working the 12 steps and should be
under the care of a professional who is trained to help addicts/alcoholics with mood disorders.

An impaired limbic system can manifest as moodiness, irritability, clinical depression, negative thinking, negative perceptions of events, decreased motivation, floods of negative emotion, appetite and sleep problems, decreased or increased sexual responsiveness and possibly social isolation. Primarily there’s an impaired ability to regulate levels of fear, anger, and sadness which is part of the foundation of states such as chronic anxiety or depression.

As one recovering nurse anesthetist put it, “emotional sobriety is my ability to stay in the day and face challenges calmly one day at a time. I’ve had several over the past year, and I’m able to see my part in them, even if they seem circumstantial. And it’s the ability to reign in my catastrophizing, square my shoulders back and tackle a piece of the problem today.”

Signs of Emotional Sobriety

Tian Dayton, PhD has identified signs of emotional sobriety:

Ability to regulate strong emotions

Ability to regulate mood

Ability to maintain a perspective on life circumstances

Ability to regulate potentially harmful substances or behaviors

Ability to live in the present

Ability to regulate activity levels

Ability to live with deep, intimate connection

Resilience (the ability to roll with the punches)

We at Palmetto teach these principles as part of our goal in helping addicts, alcoholics, gamblers, and eating disorder patients. This sets the foundation for utilizing the 12 steps for much more than simply curtailing the addiction or dependency. As Bill Wilson put it 23 years after founding AA: It is the next frontier.